The Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust and Flinn Foundation Launch 
$45 million Initiative to Develop Personalized Diagnostics 


Nobel laureate Dr. Lee Hartwell, TGen and the Biodesign Institute at 
ASU to lead Arizona-based global effort to improve patient outcomes 
and reduce health care costs 

10-17-2007

PHOENIX, Oct. 17, 2007 -- Two Arizona-based philanthropic 
organizations have committed $45 million to fund an innovative 
initiative to develop personalized molecular diagnostics. The ability 
to diagnose and treat disease based on every person's unique 
physiological makeup is critical to enabling physicians to improve 
health outcomes while at the same time reducing medical costs. 
Under the Partnership for Personalized Medicine, The Virginia G. 
Piper Charitable Trust has committed $35 million and the Flinn 
Foundation has granted $10 million to bring together a wide range of 
resources to advance a global personalized medicine initiative. 

World-renowned scientist Dr. Lee Hartwell, 2001 Nobel laureate and 
director of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, has been 
recruited to lead this effort. The Hutchinson Center, based in 
Seattle, is a leader in using molecular diagnostics for the early 
detection and clinical management of cancer and other diseases. In 
addition to his current position as president and director of Fred 
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, he will chair the Partnership 
executive committee, which includes Dr. George Poste, director of the 
Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University, and Dr. Jeffrey 
Trent, president and scientific director of the Translational 
Genomics Research Institute (TGen). 

"It is a tremendous opportunity for me to be a part of this new model 
for improving health while reducing health care costs that is being 
funded by the Piper and Flinn foundations," Hartwell said. "The 
collaboration between TGen, the Biodesign Institute at ASU, other 
institutions in Arizona and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center 
brings together enormous expertise to tackle major challenges in 
bringing new science and technology to disease management." 

The cornerstone of the Partnership is the creation of the Virginia G. 
Piper Center for Personalized Diagnostics that draws upon the 
scientific strengths of two of the state's leading bioscience 
entities, TGen and the Biodesign Institute at ASU, each of which will 
contribute significant laboratory space to the effort. The Piper 
Center will utilize bioinformatics and high-performance computing 
expertise at both institutions, existing nanotechnology and imaging 
expertise at the Biodesign Institute, and supercomputing resources 
through ASU's Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering. 

Additionally, an industrial scale, high-throughput proteomics 
production facility will be established that taps expertise at both 
TGen and the Biodesign Institute at ASU in robotics, protein analysis 
and computing. 

Hartwell's involvement provides the Piper Center with opportunity to 
draw on the Hutchinson Center's extensive capabilities in health 
economics and the design of clinical and public-health trials through 
consultative and collaborative relationships. 

"The Piper trustees made this investment because Dr. Hartwell has a 
vision to transform the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of 
disease," said Dr. Judy Jolley Mohraz, president and CEO of the Piper 
Trust. "That vision draws together scientists, clinicians, engineers, 
statisticians, insurers and regulators to work collectively to make 
health care more targeted and affordable. This initiative holds the 
promise of making a difference in the quality of life for people here 
in Arizona and throughout the world." 

According to John Murphy, president and CEO of the Flinn Foundation, 
biomarker discovery and diagnostic development could ultimately lead 
to earlier disease detection and more precise disease management. "To 
leverage Arizona's institutional assets, the Flinn Foundation's grant 
commitment to TGen will link Arizona's research universities, health 
care providers, research institutes and industry partners throughout 
the state to support the collection and storage of biospecimens and 
drive Arizona-centric demonstration projects," Murphy said. 

Approximately 50 percent of the Flinn Fund for Arizona Proteomics 
Research will be available to promote research collaborations to 
leverage the state's significant institutional resources in this 
field, Murphy added, with the balance supporting the creation of a 
high-throughput proteomics production facility. 

Proteomics is a promising and cutting-edge field that studies 
proteins and their functions in the body. The proteomics production 
facility will focus on discovering new proteins for the development 
of diagnostic tests for patients with cancer or other illnesses. 
These tests could ultimately lead to earlier disease detection and 
more precise disease management. 

Even though the necessary technologies to develop personalized 
diagnostic tests are available, barriers such as the expense of 
clinical trials and difficulty obtaining clinical samples have 
significantly slowed the development process. The Partnership will 
focus on the development, testing and validation of new molecular 
diagnostic tools and the approval and distribution of these tools for 
widespread clinical use. This will be accomplished through a series 
of collaborative demonstration projects that integrate key health 
organizations. 

"The Holy Grail of personalized medicine includes blood-based tests 
that improve diagnosis and help direct clinical care," said 
Trent. "The unparalleled opportunity the Partnership provides is to 
expand the magnitude of proteomic studies across a spectrum of key 
clinical questions." 

The Partnership includes recruitment of new faculty and will engage 
national and international partners to ensure developments are 
rapidly commercialized. 

"With the team of scientific and clinical research excellence we are 
assembling, our goal is to transform medicine from the current 'one 
size fits all' approach to one that is targeted around a patient's 
unique genetic and molecular profile," Poste said. 

Partnerships formed with large health care systems and disease-
focused foundations will facilitate the implementation and validation 
of molecular diagnostics in clinical settings, as well as close 
ongoing interaction between scientists and clinicians. Health care 
systems will benefit from newly developed diagnostics through the 
most cost-effective use of medical treatments, while patients and the 
public in general will enjoy greater overall health outcomes. 

ASU President Michael Crow added that this endeavor "promises to 
become a shining example of how multiple partners can work together 
to address a critical need in human health and accelerate solutions 
that extend beyond our own community." 

### 

About The Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust
A private foundation, The Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust is 
dedicated to honoring Virginia Galvin Piper's philanthropic 
commitment to changing lives and strengthening community in Maricopa 
County. By investing in nonprofits and encouraging strategic planning 
for the future, the Trust strives to make Maricopa County a stronger, 
more nurturing and vibrant community. For more information, visit 
www.pipertrust.org. 

About the Flinn Foundation
The Flinn Foundation is an independent grant-making charity 
established by a Phoenix physician and his wife (Robert S. and Irene 
P. Flinn) in 1965. It is dedicated to improving the quality of life 
in Arizona principally by advancing the medical sciences. It fulfills 
this mission through its support of various scientific and 
educational programs and activities, including the Flinn Scholars 
program. For more information, visit www.flinn.org. 

About TGen
TGen is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization focused on developing 
earlier diagnoses and smarter treatments. Translational genomics 
research is a relatively new field employing innovative advances 
arising from the Human Genome Project and applying them to the 
development of diagnostics, prognostics and therapies for cancer, 
neurological disorders, diabetes and other complex diseases. TGen's 
research is based on personalized medicine. The institute plans to 
accomplish its goals through robust and disease-focused research. For 
more information, visit www.tgen.org. 

About the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University
The Biodesign Institute at ASU integrates diverse fields of science 
to cure and prevent disease, overcome the limitations of injury, 
renew the environment and improve national security. By fusing 
research in biology, engineering, medicine, physics, information 
technology and cognitive science, the institute accelerates 
discoveries into uses that can be adopted rapidly by the private 
sector. For more information, visit www.biodesign.asu.edu. 

About Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
At Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, interdisciplinary teams of 
world-renowned scientists and humanitarians work together to prevent, 
diagnose and treat cancer, HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Hutchinson 
Center researchers, including three Nobel laureates, bring a 
relentless pursuit and passion for health, knowledge and hope to 
their work and to the world. For more information, visit 
www.fhcrc.org. 



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